Author:
Kitamura Toshinori,Sugawara Masumi,Sugawara Kensuke,Toda Mari Aoki,Shima Satoru
Abstract
BackgroundThe psychosocial correlates of depression during pregnancy were explored.MethodPregnant women attending the antenatal clinic of a general hospital (n=1329) received a set of questionnaires including Zung's Self-Rating Depression Score (SDS). SDS high scorers (>49) (the cases: n=179) were compared with low scorers (<38) (the controls; n=343).ResultsThe cases were characterised by: first delivery; more nausea, vomiting, and anorexia; more menstrual pains and premenstrual irritability; early paternal loss; lower maternal care and higher paternal overprotection; higher public self-consciousness score; more smoking and use of medication in pregnancy; unwanted pregnancy; negative psychological response to the pregnancy by the woman and husband; poor intimacy by the husband; and having remarried.ConclusionsDepression in early pregnancy is determined mainly by psychosocial factors.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
81 articles.
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